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Archbishop
prays for Mugabe's death
Institute
for War & Peace Reporting (IWPR)
(Africa Reports No 35, 24-May-05)
By Fred Bridgland in Edinburgh
May 24,
2005
http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/ar/ar_ze_035_1_eng.txt
Roman Catholic
Archbishop Pius Ncube, the most outspoken critic of President Robert
Mugabe within Zimbabwe, has withdrawn his appeal to the people of
his country to stage a peaceful uprising to overthrow Mugabe, whom
he accuses of having widely rigged parliamentary elections last
March.
On the eve of
his receipt of the Robert Burns International Humanitarian Award
- a Scottish prize - Archbishop Ncube told IWPR, "I have to admit
that the people are so oppressed and full of fear that there's no
possibility of an uprising.
"If it happened
now, it would be worse than Uzbekistan. They would be shot.
"People are
so desperate they just don't know where to turn. The [opposition]
Movement for Democratic Change [MDC] just wants the ordinary people
to lead the revolution, without making any sacrifice themselves.
"People are
in neutral until some new leader strikes a chord. Meanwhile, we're
all being held to ransom by one despot. So that's why we're hoping
he'll evacuate this earth."
At his Easter
Sunday Mass earlier this year in Bulawayo's magnificent St Mary's
Cathedral, Ncube told the packed congregation, with agents of Mugabe's
feared Central Intelligence Organisation, CIO, sitting in the rear
pews, "I hope that people get so disillusioned that they really
organise and kick [Mugabe] out by a non-violent, popular mass uprising.
People have been too soft with this government. So people should
just pluck up a bit of courage and stand up against him and chase
him away.
"I am not advocating
violence. I am simply backing a non-violent popular uprising, like
that in the Philippines in 1986 and such as Ukraine recently. Somewhere
there shall come a resurrection in Zimbabwe."
Ncube, who is
archbishop of Zimbabwe's second city Bulawayo, was selected for
the Burns Award by a panel headed by Lord David Steel, former leader
of the British Liberal Party and the first speaker of the Scottish
Parliament. Ncube won against other nominees who included Burmese
opposition politician Aung San Suu Kyi and former United N troop
commander in Rwanda, General Romeo Dallaire.
The Burns Award
is named in honour of Scotland's most renowned poet Robert Burns.
Interrupting the archbishop as he studied Burns' most internationally
famous poem, "A Man's a Man for A' That", IWPR interviewed Archbishop
Ncube in Edinburgh on the eve of the May 20 award ceremony at Culzean
Castle on the west coast of Scotland.
In his acceptance
address, Ncube said, "I receive this award on behalf of many others
who work for peace in Zimbabwe. I also receive it on behalf of the
suffering people of Zimbabwe.
"The president
of Zimbabwe is also called Robert, like Burns - yet he, unlike the
poet, is lacking in compassion and feeling for others. Burns had
a hard life and understood the lot of the common man. 'A Man's a
Man for A' That' portrays the dignity of the common man. He calls
on human beings to be brothers and sisters and to support one another
through respect, love and service. There is no greater message in
the world than that."
Ncube, a frail,
soft-spoken, slightly bumbling man who was once a goatherd has become
the biggest thorn in the Zimbabwean leader's side.
He told IWPR,
"We're all praying that the Lord will soon take Mugabe away. Everyone
is fed up with him, including his own [ruling ZANU PF party] people.
We're all hoping against hope that something will happen."
Archbishop Ncube,
aged 58, is 24 years Mugabe's junior. It's one of the great traditions
of African society - a custom widely and cynically abused in modern
times - that younger people must respect their elders. But Ncube
regards Mugabe with utter contempt.
Mugabe splutters
back, in attacks full of rage and wild allegations. According to
Ncube, Mugabe has denounced him as a HIV-positive homosexual who
has raped and impregnated nuns, and has also accused him of "Satanic
betrayal" for campaigning against English cricket tours of Zimbabwe.
Mugabe also
accuses the archbishop of working with UK prime minister Tony Blair
to overthrow the Zimbabwean leadership. Ncube shrugs this off. As
far as he is concerned, the more international leaders who condemn
Mugabe the better.
His advice for
the British prime minister is, "Simply say to Mugabe, 'Look after
your people'. Blair should say, 'Your people are starving. Your
people have no jobs. Your people cannot afford housing. Three-and-a-half
million Zimbabweans, 20 per cent of the population, have fled the
country. It's all because of you. It's all your fault. Stop blaming
other people. It's you who has destroyed Zimbabwe, and it's deceitful
and lacking in all objective truth to say otherwise'. He should
just tell him off, just like that."
Archbishop Ncube
ruminated on what Jesus might have said if he was an itinerant preacher
in Zimbabwe today, "Because Christ was God-centred and compassionate,
he would condemn the way the government uses every opportunity to
oppress the people.
"I think he
would condemn especially the use by Mugabe of food for political
purposes" - a reference to the president's use of scarce food in
last March's parliamentary election to coerce village people into
voting for ZANU PF.
"Christ would
condemn the violence, widespread rape and torture by government
agencies and the youth militia," he said.
The archbishop
is particularly distressed by the 50,000-strong National Youth Militia
- Mugabe's widely feared personal stormtroopers who have been compared
with Adolf Hitler's Brownshirts. The Youth Militia, known as the
Green Bombers for their bottle-green uniforms, and after a particularly
unpleasant local blowfly, chant slogans in praise of Mugabe on parade
and end with denunciations of Blair.
Ncube said Mugabe
had brainwashed young people in the Green Bomber camps. "They specialise
in violence," said the archbishop. "This is killing off the souls
of young people."
Ncube recently
accompanied a 19-year-old Green Bomber deserter, who gave his name
only as Wesley, to safety in Johannesburg.
With the Archbishop
standing next to him, Wesley described to reporters how he and about
100 other Green Bombers, high on marijuana and beer, had attacked
a white-owned farm near Beit Bridge in southern Zimbabwe.
"We surrounded
the farm and after entering the house we tortured him [the farmer],"
said Wesley. "After that his wife was raped and we raped his daughters.
They were aged seven and twelve, and the youngest one was around
four years old."
The Green Bombers,
armed with Kalashnikov rifles, then locked the family inside the
house and lobbed petrol bombs through windows.
"The family
didn't survive," said Wesley. "We burned them all. I feel terrible
for the things I have done."
The archbishop
said, "I don't think Christ would have survived in Zimbabwe. Mugabe's
government doesn't like people who speak the truth. Plenty of people
[who criticise the government] have died mysteriously. Christ wouldn't
have had a chance."
This raises
the question why the Archbishop himself is still alive and able
to travel freely to Scotland to receive his award.
Ncube says there
have been many plans for his assassination, with agents of Mugabe's
CIO warning him, "We can kill you and bury you in a shallow grave."
He went on,
"But I have also been tipped off by people in state intelligence
who have cautioned me, 'Don't move here, there. Don't move at night,
don't move alone'. CIO agents follow me everywhere."
Ncube has lined
the walls of St Mary's Cathedral with posters not only of traditional
Christian saints but also of modern civil rights heroes such as
Nelson Mandela, El Salvador's Archbishop Oscar Romero, Mahatma Gandhi,
Martin Luther King and South Africa's Archbishop Desmond Tutu. The
latter has described Mugabe as "bonkers", and was in turn denounced
by the Zimbabwean president as "an angry, evil and embittered little
bishop".
The archbishop
believes he has survived because of direct warnings from the late
Pope John Paul II to Mugabe, who was brought up a Catholic by his
mother.
"Mugabe obviously
still fears the Catholic Church," one senior Zimbabwe journalist
told IWPR. "If [MDC leader] Morgan Tsvangirai or anyone else said
the kind of things the archbishop says they'd have been in the slammer
that night."
Ncube dismisses
Mugabe as a "lip-service" Christian. "He's a mere murderer watching
his people sink," said the archbishop. "The way he has killed people,
what kind of Christian is that? Many of his MPs are big killers,
and he has never reprimanded them."
Turning to Zimbabwe's
immediate problems, the archbishop said the greatest need was for
the western democracies to donate food in great quantities before
hundreds of thousands of people die of starvation in the coming
months.
Although Mugabe
told the West before the March election not to foist food on Zimbabweans
- "We are not hungry. We don't want to be choked. We have enough."
- he is now sending out subtle messages that the country is broke
and needs emergency food aid.
Presented with
the argument that sending food now would only prolong Mugabe's reign,
Ncube responded, "The West will fail - even though it's not really
its responsibility to feed the Zimbabwean people - if it declines
to give food aid.
"If the food
is refused, the people will just die quietly because at the moment
they have no effective leader against Mugabe. I believe a refusal
will mean the common people suffer, not Mugabe. He doesn't care
if they die. Didymus Mutasa [Mugabe's food and security minister]
said it would be easier to govern the country if half the people
died of AIDS.
"Just because
Mugabe is a deceitful, cunning and sly criminal, the world must
not let the people starve."
Zimbabwe was
once the breadbasket of southern Africa, producing abundant crops
that made the country self-sufficient in food while earning foreign
exchange from huge exports. However, the agricultural economy has
completely collapsed in the past five years, as a result of the
anarchic invasions of mainly white-owned commercial farms launched
by Mugabe in 2000 and exacerbated by the failure of this year's
rains.
The archbishop
cautioned against the international community allowing Mugabe to
politicise food donations, "The world's leaders must insist that
the food be distributed to all and sundry.
"The government
must not be allowed to control the distribution. That must be handled
directly by the [United Nations] World Food Programme or by trusted
organisations like World Vision and Catholic Relief Services."
*Fred Bridgland
is an IWPR editor in Johannesburg.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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